Cooking Beans With Tender Texture & Perfect Skins

And Brined Beans Are Less Gassy, Too

Autumn is soup season around here, and the soup pot is almost always on the stove. My younger housemates take hot soup to lunch every day, and I find their appreciation stimulating. I love to try out new ideas and experiment with variations on old favorites, but I can’t seem to make a SMALL pot of soup. Thus, it’s awesome to have hungry eaters ready to help me out.

I’m still enjoying eating plant-based meals and I am kind of astonished that I have not had any cravings for dairy. I love cheese of almost all kinds (except for pre-sliced, pre-wrapped yellow plastic cheese, of course) and I expected that doing without it would be challenging. So far, I’m happily exploring foods that don’t require cheese: I would rather do without than eat processed imitations of dairy, and the world is full of cuisines that don’t include dairy.

Perfect Beans, Every Time

A few years ago I was given an incredible gift of dried beans from Ayers Creek Farm, an organic farm near Portland that specializes in heritage European beans (among other delicious things). I was amazed at how totally lovely they were, cooking up perfectly tender and without broken skins. Since then, I’ve noticed that most beans are not so blessed. Store-bought beans may have been in storage for a long time; years, even. It can be a challenge to cook such beans properly, and it’s frustrating to go through the bother of soaking and cooking only to end up with mealy or tough-skinned results. Argh!

Happily, browsing through Harold McGee’s fascinating kitchen classic, On Food And Cooking; the science and lore of the kitchen, encouraged me to brine-soak dry beans before cooking them. If you haven’t ever seen this book, look at the local library and check it out if they have it. (Ask them to buy it if they don’t; it’s a must for cooks.) In a lengthy article on beans in various cultures, McGee lists many reasons for them to turn out tough, hard, or mushy, and suggests that soaking them in salted water before cooking can help.  It also reduces the oligosaccharides that cause gas, so it’s all good.

First Salty, Then Plain

Well! Sure enough, it totally does. The trick is to soak them in salted water over night, then rinse them well and cook them in plain water.   Beans take up about half the water they are going to in a couple of hours, but need 10-12 hours to fully hydrate. One they’ve had their overnight bath and rinse, they cook up quickly and are perfectly tender, with whole skins and a pleasing texture. Yea! In fact, if you use a pressure cooker, McGee points out that salt-presoaked beans can cook up in as little as 10 minutes.

The rule of thumb is to use 2-3 tablespoons of salt to a gallon of soaking water. Stir in the salt until fully dissolved, then add the dry beans and let them sit overnight. The next day, turn them out in a colander, rinse them, then soak them briefly (2-3 minutes) in cold water, and rinse again. Since excess cooking liquid leaches out bean flavor, just put them in a pot with water to cover by about an inch. Bring to a low boil, reduce heat and simmer until tender. Depending on how dry the beans were, this could be anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour.

Soy And Soy-Free Flavor Infusions

Adding salt at this point will help bring out the bean’s flavor, but I find they taste better when I add some shoyu or soy sauce instead. This is especially pleasing when you store beans in the fridge for a day or two, since the flavors will meld intriguingly. If you want a less-salty but still luscious flavor, try adding coconut aminos instead. This yummy stuff is something like Bragg’s, but is soy free and according to the label, it contains 65% less sodium than soy sauce. I’m using a kind called Coconut Secret Raw Coconut Aminos which lists as ingredients only organic coconut sap and sea salt but has a magical, complex flavor that my whole household is crazy about. It’s stupendous on steamed cauliflower or roasted turnips or in salad dressings or pretty much anything you can think of. Yum!

Another great way to flavor beans is to add chopped shallots, garlic, or onions at the very end of the cooking time, along with fresh or dried herbs. I like to use thyme, as well as oregano, basil, and savory (also good with green beans). It’s also lovely to top off your cooked beans or bean soups with a little drizzle of lemon- or garlic-infused olive oil and a few bits of fresh apple. Other good garnishes include garlic croutons, fresh cilantro and soft goat cheese (ok, dairy) or skinny ribbons of fresh basil and chopped cherry tomatoes. We are still harvesting the brilliantly flavorful Indigo children cherry toms; I keep leaving a few to see just how long we’ll be able to enjoy them.

A Very Good Soup

Here’s my current favorite, soup, a richly layered blend of black beans and vegetables that’s thick and luscious. I find myself using my immersion blender more and more, since it thickens soups beautifully without any need for other thickening agents and is so easy to clean up compared to a blender or food processor. You can make your soups smooth or chunky simply by taking more or less time to whirl the blender in the pot. It’s even kind of fun, but it is a really good idea to keep the blade under the soup’s surface or you’ll have splatters everywhere!

To make the vegetable broth, plop all your veggie scraps into a pot with water and sea salt and simmer it along side the soup until needed. I used carrot and potato peels, onion and garlic skins and root ends, celery and fennel ends, and just a few cauliflower trimmings (the cole clan can be a bit overwhelming).

Black Bean Soup With Garlic Croutons

1 tablespoon fruity olive oil
1 large onion, chopped
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
3 shallots or garlic cloves, chopped
1/4 teaspoon hot pepper flakes
3 stalks celery, chopped
2 Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled and chopped
1 medium carrot, peeled and chopped
2 cups cauliflower florets
3 cups cooked black beans with cooking liquid
1-2 tablespoons garlic-infused olive oil
1/2 cup garlic croutons (see below)

In a soup pot, heat oil, onion and salt over medium high heat and cook for 2 minutes. Add garlic and cook to the fragrance point (about 1 minute). Add potatoes, carrots, and cauliflower, reduce heat to low, cover pan and cook for 5 minutes to sweat vegetables. Add 1 cup water, cover pan and cook until vegetables are barely soft (8-10 minutes) Stir in beans and their liquid, bring to a simmer and simmer for 15-20 minutes to meld. Puree to desired consistency with an immersion blender or use a potato masher. Serve hot, garnished with garlic-infused oil and croutons. Serves 4-6.

Making Marvelous Croutons

We eat a lot of salads here and we all love the crunch and savor of herbed and garlic flavored croutons as garnish. Since homemade croutons taste much better than store bought ones (which are apt to be a bit stale, if not rancid), we make them several times a week. Whenever the oven is on for roasting vegetables or whatever, I stick in a pan of croutons as well, since they vanish like the wind. I often use Dave’s Killer Bread as a base, since the end pieces are too thick for my taste; they make terrific croutons. If you don’t care for rosemary, just leave it out….

Garlic Rosemary (Maybe) Croutons

2 tablespoons fruity olive oil
3-4 large cloves garlic, chopped
1 tablespoon rosemary, minced (optional)
1/4 teaspoon sea salt
2 cups day-old (or older) whole grain bread
(preferably with seeds), cubed

Pour oil into a rimmed baking sheet and sprinkle with garlic, rosemary (if using) and sea salt. Gently toss the bread cubes and any crumbs in the oil with your hands to coat fairly evenly. Bake at 350 for 15-20 minutes or at 400 for 8-10 minutes or to desired crispness. Store in a tightly sealed container (preferably glass) for up to a week. Makes about 2 cups.

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Autumn Ice Cream And Other Seasonal Treats

 

Enjoying The Final Fruits Of Fall

Oil pear painting by Norma Wilson

Our farmers market is overflowing with apples, pears, plums, and even a few late peaches. The final fruits of fall taste especially sweet, perhaps because their sugars are concentrated as they ripen and plants begin to shut down for winter. I am delighting in a flat of late local raspberries, probably the last of the season, which taste like drops of magic elixir. Some I froze quickly, arranging them on a rimmed baking sheet in a single layer. Once frozen, they can be stored in tightly sealed containers for several months to brighten holiday dishes and desserts.

Others I made variously into ice cream, raspberry crisp, and muffins, all of which are extremely eatable. I tried pear ice cream but found the texture dubious, though both an apple pear and a peach-pear crumble were delectable. I did come up with a vegan version of fruity ice cream that is lush, rich, and toothsome. It’s based on coconut milk, which performs far better than the nut milks I tried first (kind of icky, sadly).

From Sweet To Spicy And Back Again

I’ve also been roasting everything from kale and cabbage wedges to green tomatoes and Brussels sprouts. Apples and pears both caramelize deliciously when roasted and can be seasoned with sweet or spicy variations that are equally pleasing. Tempted? Here are some autumnal recipes to start you off on your own explorations!

Raspberry Vegan Ice Cream

2 cups mashed ripe raspberries (peaches, etc.)
2/3 cups sugar (or to taste)
tiny pinch sea salt
2 cups coconut milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

In a medium bowl, combine mashed fruit, sugar, and salt and let stand for at least 10 minutes. (For fullest flavor, cover and refrigerate overnight.) Add the coconut milk, stir well and add vanilla to taste. Freeze in an ice cream maker for at least an hour, then let stand for a few minutes before serving. Makes about 3 cups.

Vegan Crisps And Crumbles

Most fruit crisps and crumbles rely on butter to make a crunchy, delectable topping. So far, a blend of fruit butter, coconut oil, and honey is the best substitution I’ve found. (Nut butters are yummy too but tend to overwhelm all the other flavors.)

Vegan Apple-Pear Crumble

2 Braeburn or any dessert apples, cored and thinly sliced
2 Bosch or Bartlett pears, cored and thinly sliced
1/4 cup dark brown sugar
2 tablespoons honey
1 cup roasted almonds or walnuts, chopped
1 cup old fashioned rolled oats
1/4 cup apple butter
2 tablespoons coconut oil (solid)
2-3 tablespoons honey
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg

Preheat oven to bake 350 degrees F. Layer fruit into a medium (8- or 9-inch) baking pan, sprinkle with brown sugar, set aside. Blend nuts and oats with apple butter, coconut oil, honey, and spices. 1/4 cup soft butter with oats, Sprinkle evenly over fruit and bake at 350 until tender (40-50 minutes). Serve warm. Serves at least one.

Roasted Fruit, Sweet And Spicy

You can ring changes on these basic recipes by using different fruit, oils, and/or spices. So far, all have been lovely and eaten with yummy noises (always a good sign).

Savory Roasted Apple Rings

2 Braeburn, Cox, or any dessert apples, cored
1 tablespoon olive oil
1/4 teaspoon sea salt
1/4 teaspoon smoked paprika
1 teaspoon curry powder

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Slice apples into rings (1/2 inch thick) and rub with oil. Place on a rimmed baking sheet, sprinkle with salt and bake at 400 degrees until the edges are lightly caramelized (20-25 minutes). While still hot, gently toss with smoked paprika and curry powder and serve warm. Lovely with roasted vegetables or curried anything. Serves 4.

Spicy Roasted Pears

1 tablespoon rice or safflower oil
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon coriander
1/4 teaspoon ginger
2 Bartlett or Bosch pears, cored and quartered lengthwise
2 teaspoons sugar (any kind)

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Blend oil with spices on a rimmed baking sheet, add pears and gently toss with your hands to coat evenly. Sprinkle with sugar and bake at 400 degrees until the edges are lightly caramelized (20-25 minutes). Serve warm with ice cream or fresh raspberries. Serves 4.

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Seasonal Garden Pizza

 

Glorious Toppings Make For Autumnal Treats

I don’t know anybody who doesn’t love pizza. Happily, it’s almost as easy to make as it is to eat, and nothing tastes better than straight-from-the-oven pizza. There are lots of variables, of course, starting with the kind of crust you prefer. I am firmly in the Northern Italian crust camp, especially as made in Florence, where I went to school for a few memorable summers.

My friends and I had a little apartment  on Via dei Neri, just around the corner from the Uffizi gallery, which I visited on an almost daily basis. Also just around the corner was a tiny neighborhood pizzeria, too small for tables. To order, you walked up to a tall wooden bar and told the cheeky young men who made the pizza what kind you wanted. The result came back fast, served on a piece of brown paper, sizzling hot and tasting totally unlike anything I’d ever eaten in America.

Learning To Love The Difference

Back in the 1960s and 70s, most ‘ethnic’ food was a pale imitation of the real thing. I vividly recall eating my first ‘taco’ at the 1963 Worlds Fair in New York. It consisted of a crunchy, pre-folded and stiff shell filled with Iceberg lettuce, ground beef, and shredded orange American cheese. Yikes! At the time, it seemed amazingly different and delicious, mainly because of the contrasts of cold crisp lettuce and hot ground meat.

Today, of course, we are able to access ingredients from all over the world, and it’s possible to find ethnic restaurants that serve up reasonable approximations of food from many lands. Even so, there are still thousands of crappy restaurants serving millions of dreadful meals that bear no resemblance whatsoever to food from China, Thailand, Mexico or Italy (etc. etc. etc.).

So What’s My Point?

OK, here’s what’s on my mind (and table). Northern Italian pizza is one of my favorite things to make and eat, especially in fall, when so many garden ingredients are available. This pizza  begins with a thin, crisp crust, baked on a pizza stone at very high temperatures (up to 800 degrees F in a real pizza oven). At home, we can get a similar effect with a 500 degree oven. Tempting as it is to eat super-hot pizza, let it cool for a minute before eating, to avoid burning your tongue. Ask me how I know!

Northern Italian Pizza Dough

This is a very easy recipe if you use a food processor.

1 cup lukewarm water
1 packet or 1-1/4 teaspoons dry instant yeast
1-3/4 cups (8-3/4 ounces) unbleached all-purpose flour
1 cup whole wheat pastry flour
2 teaspoons sea salt
2 teaspoons sugar

Adjust oven rack to lowest position and place a pizza stone on it. Heat oven to 500 degrees F. (if you have a convection oven option, use it). Stir yeast into water, set aside. Place the metal blade in your food processor and process the flours, salt, and sugar until blended (a few seconds). With machine running, drizzle in yeast water through the feed tube and process until dough forms a sticky ball that clears the sides. If dough is too sticky and clings to blade, add flour 1 tablespoon at a time. If dough is too dry, add water 1 tablespoon at a time.

Divide dough into 2 equal balls, cover with a damp cloth and let sit until doubled in size (about an hour). When ready to shape, dust dough with flour and roll tin on a sheet of parchment paper dusted with flour. Roll from the middle out to the sides, reducing pressure as you get to the edge to keep dough even, and turning the parchment each time. Add a thin layer of sauce, then slide a baking sheet under the parchment paper and use it to help you slide the pizza onto the baking stone (dough remains on parchment during baking) . Bake until edges begin to brown (5-6 minutes). Remove and add additional toppings, then return to the oven and bake until cheese melts (5-6 minutes). Slice and serve at once, then repeat with second ball of dough.

Speedy Pizza Sauce

1 28-ounce can diced tomatoes, preferably fire-roasted
1/2 teaspoon sugar
2 cloves garlic, pressed
1 tablespoon fresh basil OR 1 teaspoon dried basil
1/4 teaspoon sea salt
1 cup cherry tomatoes, halved

In a food processor with a metal blade, process tomatoes to a coarse puree (2-3 brief pulses). Drain in a fine mesh sieve for 30 minutes, stirring occasionally. When drained, combine in a bowl with sugar, garlic, basil, sea salt and fresh tomatoes. Refrigerate any  extra and serve over hot pasta or rice.

Presto Pesto

Italian cooks mash, grind, mince or otherwise mingle fresh basil with coarse sea salt to keep the basil from discoloring.

Pesto Sauce

1/4 cup pine nuts OR almonds OR walnuts
3 medium cloves garlic, peeled and chopped
2 cups fresh basil, stemmed
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
1/4 cup grated Parmesan or Romano cheese
1/4 cup olive oil
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

In a food processor with a metal blade, process nuts and garlic to a coarse paste. Add basil and 1/4 teaspoon salt and process for 8-10 seconds. Add cheese and process lightly. Drizzle in oil through the food tube while processor is running. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Keep refrigerated in a tightly covered glass container, topped off with 1/2 inch of olive oil. Replace oil topping each time you use some pesto, and use it up within a month.

Make Your Own Salt Blends

Many Italian cooks use herbed sea salt blends to add subtle warmth and depth to vey simple dishes. Here’s my current favorite:

Savory Sea Salt

1/2 cup coarse sea salt
2 cloves garlic
2 tablespoons rosemary, stemmed
1 teaspoon lavender

In a blender with a metal blade, process for 3-5 seconds. Store in a tightly sealed jar.

Pizza Margherita

My very favorite pizza was named for an Italian queen who loved this pure, basic pizza. This remains the classic pizza eaten in every Italian town.

1 batch Pizza Dough
1 batch Speedy Tomato Sauce
1/4 cup fresh basil leaves, chopped
8 ounces fresh (soft) mozzarella cheese, thinly sliced
2 tablespoons Parmesan or Romano cheese, coarsely grated
1 pinch sea salt, preferably Seasoned Sea Salt
1 teaspoon olive oil

Press each dough ball out to an 8-inch round, then flatten and stretch (or roll) to a 12-inch round. Top with a thin layer of sauce and bake at 500 degrees until the edges are browned (5-6 minutes). Remove from oven, add additional toppings, always ending with cheese. Drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle with sea salt, return to oven and bake until cheese melts (5-6 minutes). Serve at once.

Optional Toppings:

Crimini or brown field mushrooms, thinly sliced
Kalamata olives, quartered
Yellow or sweet onion, thinly sliced
Roasted sweet or spicy peppers, sliced
Fresh cherry tomatoes, halved
Roasted green tomatoes, halved
Shredded kale
Soft (fresh) goat cheese

Note: To reduce moisture that can cause soggy pizza, cook raw vegetables (such as peppers, zucchini, or eggplant) in 2 teaspoons of olive oil in a large frying pan over medium high heat until reduced in size by about half (5-7 minutes), then drain before adding to pizza.

Pesto Pizza

Make as above, spreading a thin layer of pesto instead of red sauce.

Each recipe serves at least one. Remember to share!

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Autumnal Vegan and/or Vegetarian Meals

 

Colorful Cooking From The Garden

photo by Robin Cushman

I love fall, when the air turns crisp and the wind smells like adventure and far traveling. I don’t actually want to go anywhere at this point in my life, since I love where I am. However, that hint of intriguingly wandering ways always makes me feel as if something wonderful was about to happen. One wonderful thing that often does happen is the coloring of the leaves on trees and shrubs and even some perennials. Spireas and barberries can rival maples in fall, and certain hydrangeas (notably Preziosa) develop burgundy and purple tints that glow in slanting late season sun.

Having grown up in New England, where fall color is legendary, I find the understated autumn foliage display here in the maritime Northwest to be less than overwhelming. However, the soft golds and bronzes of the treeline that surrounds my home are lovely. Most native foliage here is subtle rather than showy, serving as an excellent foil for the more dramatic bursts of color from exotics like sweet gum (Liquidambar styraciflua), sourwood (Oxydendrum arboreum), and Japanese maples.

Bringing Home The Color

The kitchen garden is also bright with color from tomatoes and peppers, ripening squash and pumpkins, red and golden beets, and the last of the bee-luring nasturtiums. Even the leafy greens boast tinges of pink and red and purple that make fall salads glow. A big bowl of Indigo children tomatoes looks gorgeous, the reds and oranges and gold undersides vivid beneath purple-black shoulders.

It is an enormous pleasure to bring all these colors and flavors to the table, changing up the seasoning as fancy takes me. Indian or Italian, Mexican or Turkish, Asian or American….

Gilding The Pasta

This is fast becoming one of my favorite ways to enjoy winter squash. When you cook one, you nearly always have extra squash left over, so why not puree the extra and freeze it? You can flavor it later with orange zest and hot peppers, or sesame oil and fresh ginger, or try rosemary and anchovies, as I do here.

The miso version is vegan (if you don’t use cheese), and it tastes amazingly rich and mysterious. I got the squash-miso idea from Joe Yonan’s book, Eat Your Vegetables: Bold Recipes For The Single Cook. His recipes usually serve one, which I found helpful when I was widowed and suddenly cooking for myself alone.

Pasta With Golden Sauce

1 tablespoon fruity olive oil
1 large yellow onion, chopped
3 large cloves garlic, chopped
1 teaspoon stemmed and chopped rosemary
1/4 teaspoon sea salt
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
4 anchovy fillets, flaked
OR 2 tablespoons miso
2 cups pureed (cooked) winter squash
8 ounces rigatoni or penne pasta
1/4 cup pumpkin seeds, toasted
1/4 cup Asiago or peccorino cheese, coarsely grated (optional)

Heat a large pot of salted water for the pasta. In a wide, shallow pan, cook oil with onion, garlic, rosemary, salt and pepper over medium high heat to the fragrance point (1-2 minutes). Mash in the anchovies or miso and stir in the winter squash puree. Bring to a simmer, reduce heat to low and simmer until pasta is cooked. Cook apsta according to package directions, drain (DO NOT rinse in cold water, please) and divide between 4 pasta plates. Top with sauce and garnish with pumpkin seeds and cheese for those who want it. Serves four.

Autumn Enchiladas

When I want quick, hearty and satisfying comfort food, I often make some version of enchiladas. They freeze beautifully, so you can package extras up in smaller servings and tuck them away for a rainy night. You can use whatever combination of vegetables seems most appealing, though I always include onions, garlic, and peppers. I prefer yellow corn tortillas, even though they aren’t as easily wrapped, but here again, you can please yourself! If you don’t like green tomatillo salsa, use your own favorite, and add cheese if you like….

Green Garden Enchiladas

1 tablespoon safflower oil
1 large yellow onion, chopped
4 cloves garlic, chopped
2-3 ancho chiles (or your favorite), chopped
1/4 teaspoon sea salt
2 stalks celery, chopped
1 cup small sweet-spicy peppers (Peppadew), chopped
4 cups kale or chard, in thin ribbons
1 medium zucchini, chopped
3-4 cups tomatillo salsa verde (green sauce)
12 (or more) 6-inch corn tortillas
1 cup cilantro, stemmed
1 cup crumbled tofu
OR 1 cup grated jack cheese
2-3 limes, cut in wedges

In a wide shallow pan, cook oil, half the onion, the garlic, the anchos,and the sea salt over medium high heat to the fragrance point (1-2 minutes). Add the celery and half the small sweet peppers and cook, stirring occasionally, until vegetables are softened (5-6 minutes). Add the zucchini and chard, stir to coat, cover pan, reduce heat to low and cook until kale is slightly wilted (3-5 minutes). Pour 1 cup green salsa into a 9 x 13 baking dish (or assorted baking dish sizes), then pour the rest into a wide, shallow bowl. In a dry iron frying pan, warm tortillas over medium high heat, then dip in green sauce and stack on a plate. Fill each tortillas with about 1/4 cup vegetable mixture, adding some cilantro and tofu or jack cheese. Roll each one up and place it folded side down in the baking dish(es). Cover with the green sauce left in the bowl and bake at 350 degrees F. until hot through (about 30 minutes). Serve with lime wedges. Serves 4-6.

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